Parshas Masei

Cities of Refuge: Sanctuary for Survival

The Mitzvah:

Where a Jew killed accidentally, he would go into exile by fleeing to one
of the established Orei HaMiklot, "Cities of Refuge" in the Holy Land.
There, he would live out his life until the death of the Kohen Gadol.
(Bamidbar 35)

Six principal cities of refuge were designated in the Holy Land, three on
either side of the River Jordan. In addition, the 42 cities of the Levites
scattered throughout the Holy Land similarly served as a safe havens for
the accidental killer. He was confined to reside within the walls of this
city. This indefinite sentence lasted until the death of the current Kohen
Gadol.

Why was the asylum of the cities of refuge necessary for the one
responsible by accident in the death of a fellow Jew?

Kedusha, sanctity intrinsically relates to the concepts of life, of G-
dliness and of geulah, redemption. It is the ideal state where spiritual
and physical coexist. There is an unbreakable umbilical chord attached to
G-d recognizing Him as the Source of all life. Conversely, tumah, impurity
is synonymous with death, with spiritual contamination and with golus,
exile. This conveys the sorry state of detachment from G-d. It is where
the spiritual is exiled from the physical, where the soul is driven out of
the body.

That the killer was responsible for the death of another human being
denotes a spiritual insensitivity to the innate value of life and more
specifically, of the divine component encased within man. In lieu of
disconnecting the deceased man's linkage to G-d, the killer should by
rights similarly lose his own existence. His introduction of death meant a
soul departing from the body, which itself represents the antithesis of
kedushah and geulah.

Instead, he has but one option available: he has to acquire a new "lease
of life".

This was achieved by going into golus, exile. He had to flee to the cities
of refuge or to the towns inhabited by the Levites. There, he would enter
a consecrated habitat and be in the company of sacred people whose lives
were fully dedicated to kedusha and attachment to G-d in their service in
the Temple. Only in their merit would he be granted a lifeline.
(Obviously, the Levites were not involved in the sin of the Golden Calf
that reintroduced mortality into the world after the Divine Revelation at
Sinai).

It was his detention and claim of 'sanctuary' within this life-affirming
environment that would be the key to his survival. Were he to step
outside, however, he would automatically sunder his link to this lifeline
and could then be killed instantly by the family of the deceased.

By virtue of his negligence to the sanctity of human life, the accidental
killer was the exact opposite of the Kohen Gadol whose kedusha was
dedicated for the Divine Presence to rest amongst the Jewish people and to
lengthen their "lives". Not so this individual responsible for shortening
life, bringing about death and in the process exiling the Shechinah. He
therefore cannot possibly coexist with the High Priest side-by-side.
Consequently, so long as the Kohen Gadol lived, the killer remained in
exile. Only upon the death of the Kohen Gadol, would he go free (Rashi,
Bamidbar 35:25).

In our own lives, it is essential that we never to forget how the life of
every human being is sacrosanct by recognizing its divine origins and its
tremendous potential. That leads us to note the ugliness of killing –
whether accidental or deliberate – that strips man created in "the image
of G-d" of his existence.

In a world of death, of spiritual contamination and exile, we the Jewish
people yearn for eternal life, renewed holiness and of redemption.

The course is presented by Osher Chaim Levene, author of SET IN STONE (2004: Targum) about the meaning of mitzvah observance and PEOPLE OF THE BOOK (2007: Targum) about the biblical personalities. A London-based writer and educator whose website www.mitzva.org explores the wisdom of the commandments, he learned at the Gateshead and Mir Yeshivas, holds a Bachelor of Science (Honors) business degree from London's City University, and is a Member of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.